Friday, October 17, 2008

ACLU: Federal death row inmates denied health care

ACLU: Federal death row inmates denied health care

Death row inmates at the federal prison in Terre Haute are routinely denied access to medical, dental and mental health care, the American Civil Liberties Union said Wednesday in a letter to a governmental official.

One diabetic prisoner showing symptoms of high blood sugar had to wait two hours to be treated with insulin, the ACLU said after a yearlong investigation. And some prisoners with dental problems chose simply to have all their teeth removed rather than suffer pain while waiting for complicated procedures, it said.

The probe by the ACLU's National Prison Project uncovered "grossly inadequate" conditions that "fail to meet constitutional standards and jeopardize the health and safety" of the more than 50 inmates awaiting execution at the prison, the organization said in the letter to Harley Lappin, director of the Federal Bureau of Prisons.

"The Constitution prohibits deliberate indifference to the serious medical needs of prisoners, including those sentenced to die," ACLU attorney Gabriel B. Eber said in a news release. He called on officials to "do whatever is necessary" to correct the problems.

Bureau of Prisons spokeswoman Felicia Ponce said she could not comment because she was not sure whether Lappin had seen the letter.

Eber said his investigation included interviews with prisoners and a review of hundreds of pages of prison records.

According to the letter, prison officials do not promptly respond to medical emergencies, provide "woefully deficient" access to acute health care and consistently ignore signs of possibly serious medical conditions. It cited one instance of an inmate pressing an emergency call button in his cell for 45 minutes before receiving attention for a heart problem.

It took 3 hours for a doctor to arrive and for the prisoner to be taken to the prison hospital, and another 5 days before the prisoner received his 1st dose of medication prescribed by a cardiologist.

"The failure of prison officials to adequately respond to the medical emergencies of prisoners, and to ensure proper access to critical medications, is inexplicable and could well result in prisoner deaths," Eber said.

One inmate who was denied mental health treatment asked for immediate execution, the letter said. It also said inmates are subjected to intense noise that results in sleep deprivation and "significant psychological distress."

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About Me

Beauty Turner lived in the Robert Taylor Homes, one of the
nation's most infamous public housing high-rise for sixteen years . She once worked for RJ now
serves as Assistant Editor,
South Street Journal
writing award-winning investigative
articles and commentaries and co-directing the Advocacy and Outreach Initiative. Beauty
is a well-known community activist as well as a regular columnist for the Hyde Park
Herald and other community newspapers. For the last several years, Beauty has worked
as a research assistant for Professor Sudhir Venkatesh, a sociologist at Columbia
University.
Beauty is now a National award winning Journalist recognized by her peers with the First
New America Award of it kind by the National Society of Professional Journalists, also a
Winner of a Studs Terkel, Peter Lisagor, Associated Press award, Chicago Association for
Black Journalist award, Courageous voice award for her activism, Black Pearl award,
Woman of the Century award, and a Shero award from the Empowerment Zone
Committee. Turner has been feature on the front page of the Wall Street Journal, Tribune
(773)297-5619 Beautyturner@gmail.com